NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,038
Is this an airline rule, or do you just mean that it will take more time? DS loves his light-up shoes, and was planning on wearing them.
It's not an airline rule, but the topic was tips for getting through security with minimum delay and hassle. Taking lace-up shoes off small children and putting them back on is never a minimum hassle. Security at most airports will not ask you to take the shoes off of really little kids as a normal thing, but they almost always will if they are light ups. Skipping the light-up shoes is not a mandatory choice, but IMO it's a wise choice.
When I look at these issues, I try not only to think of how much longer it will take me to get through the line, but what kind of ripple effect that my delay might have on those coming behind me. Anytime a person chooses to wear something that is a sure-fire dinger at the checkpoint, they are contributing to security delays, because you almost always end up blocking traffic to some extent while you put whatever it is back on.
The thing is, no one HAS to remove shoes for checkpoint screening (http://www.tsa.gov/public/display?theme=183&content=0900051****b68b8). However, doing it is usually quicker than not doing it if you make it a point to wear shoes that slip easily off and on. When travelling, I go for the path of least resistance wherever possible.
Oh, and about that overhead bin... Only an idiot would want a laptop to be the only item in a bin; the more snugly packed the bin, the less the items will shift. You really don't want a laptop to be banging back and forth across 3 feet of empty bin for several hours. An expensive coat perhaps might benefit from being by itself in a bin, but not a laptop. (Of course, we already knew that the man in question was an idiot, didn't we?)